BACKGROUND Patients with advanced ovarian carcinoma of International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) Stage IIIC should be treated by radical surgical tumor debulking with the goal of complete tumor resection. Prolonged median survival can be achieved in those patients entirely free of tumor after surgery by the administration of postsurgical platinum/taxane‐based chemotherapy regimens. However, residual tumor is present in the majority of patients, which limits survival prognosis. Different therapy approaches should be utilized to improve prognosis in these patients. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy could induce “downstaging” of the tumor and thus improve operability. Here, evidence of large ascites volume (>500 mL) can be used to identify those patients who could benefit from neoadjuvant chemotherapy. METHODS In a prospective, nonrandomized Phase II study, 31 patients with advanced FIGO Stage IIIC ovarian carcinoma and large ascites volume (>500 mL) received 3 cycles of platinum/taxane‐based combination chemotherapy, followed by tumor debulking surgery and 3 additional cycles of platinum/taxane‐based combination chemotherapy. During the same period, 32 patients with advanced FIGO Stage IIIC ovarian carcinoma and large ascites volume (>500 mL) received conventional therapy (tumor debulking surgery followed by 6 cycles of platinum/taxane‐based combination chemotherapy). The two groups were investigated and compared with respect to tumor resection rates, blood transfusion requirements, morbidity, and mortality during surgery, duration of surgery, and median survival. RESULTS The tumor resection rate in the patient group receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy was significantly higher (P = 0.04) than that of the conventionally treated group; the median survival time of 42 months versus 23 months also was significantly longer (P = 0.007). Time spent in surgery, blood transfusion requirements, morbidity, and mortality during surgery were not significantly different. CONCLUSIONS Patients with advanced ovarian carcinoma of FIGO Stage IIIC who will benefit only marginally from conventional therapy can be identified by evidence of large ascites volume. Higher tumor resection rates and longer median survival can be achieved in these patients by the use of neoadjuvant chemotherapy. A prospective randomized multicenter study currently is being performed by the Society for Gynecological Oncology in Germany to confirm these findings. Cancer 2001;92:2585–91. © 2001 American Cancer Society.
Seventy-nine mongrel dogs underwent total pancreatectomy. Fifteen dogs served as apancreatic controls and died 7.0 +/- 4.2 days later (mean +/- SD). The pancreases of 44 dogs (group 1) were intraductally distended by manual injection of Hanks' balanced salt solution (HBSS). Thereafter each organ was mechanically disrupted and subjected to collagenase digestion as described by Mirkovitch et al. The pancreases of 20 dogs (group 2) were intraductally distended and subsequently perfused with collagenase by a roller pump. The organs were then mechanically disrupted and filtered through screens as described by Horaguchi et al. The resulting tissue suspensions were injected into the spleens of the dogs as autotransplants in both groups, by direct punction of the splenic capsule in group 1 and by retrograde infusion via a splenic vein tributary in group 2. The functional outcome was better in group 2 than in group 1, as assessed by the number of animals that became normoglycemic after transplantation [15/20 (75%) vs. 13/44 (30%); P = .0025]. The degree of islet purification, as measured by an increase in the tissue insulin/amylase ratio, was higher in group 2, and in both groups it was higher in normoglycemic than in hyperglycemic animals. The percent engraftment [i.e., amount of insulin recovered from spleen as percent of tissue transplanted (mean, 15.4% in group 1 and 14.5% in group 2) or as percent of original pancreas (mean, 4.9% in group 1 and 4.4% in group 2)] was low in both groups but again was higher in normoglycemic than in hyperglycemic animals within each group. In conclusion, both the degree of engraftment and purification and the route of implantation influenced the functional outcome after dispersed pancreatic islet autotransplantation to the spleen of totally pancreatectomized dogs, with purified tissue injected retrogradely functioning better than unpurified tissue injected directly.
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